Material Witness (A Shipshewana Amish My)

chapter 4


SHANE FORCED HIMSELF to remain in his car and survey the scene. It wasn’t what he wanted to do. He wanted to push through the growing crowd until he reached Callie’s side, and then pull her into his arms and assure himself she wasn’t hurt.

But plainly she was not hurt.

He could see that from where he sat. Plus dispatch had reported one deceased and that would be the lady facedown in the parking lot with her arms splayed out to her sides. The woman appeared to be Amish, but Shane knew from his years as a county detective that clothing didn’t prove a thing.

Floodlights had already been set up by the crime-tech team. They revealed large muddy footsteps tracking away from the body and down the sidewalk to the south. Apparently this wasn’t the work of a professional. Either that or this guy wanted to be followed. By the size of those footprints, Shane concluded the perp was a he. But, given it was an old lady who had been attacked and Shane didn’t see her handbag lying around, he would have bet his 1971 Buick GSX the perp was a he without even examining the footprints.

And Shane didn’t anticipate parting with his classic Buick.

Possibly this hadn’t been a crime. Shane pulled his Chicago Cubs ball cap down farther on his head and considered the possibility.

Could be that someone found her dead and ran, but that was unlikely. Most folks in this town stuck around, called for help, and answered the officers’ questions. Even the Amish — who didn’t care to have their pictures snapped by a reporter from the Gazette — would answer questions. They might not answer with the detail Shane wanted, but still, they wouldn’t have left a body there for someone else to stumble over.

No. If the person who had been on the scene first had run, he was hiding something.

Shane surveyed the rest of the area surrounding the shop. These few minutes in his car would be the only quiet he’d have in the next twenty-four hours, and sometimes — for him — first impressions formed the cornerstone of the investigation.

Deborah stood beside Callie and the dog. He wished Callie Harper would allow him to get as close to her as she let the Labrador. The thought rudely intruded into his analysis of the scene, and Shane pushed it away as the beginnings of a headache drummed at his temples.

Andrew Gavin and Stan Taylor stood near the front of the shop, shooing witnesses back inside. It was doubtful anyone in the shop would have seen much of anything useful given the angle of the windows, which fronted out to the street — to the west. The placement of the body was to the south. Anyone inside the shop likely wouldn’t have noticed a thing unless they were hanging out the door, but he’d pursue any possible lead. Cases had turned on less.

He returned his attention to Callie and Deborah and noticed they were staring north — almost as if they wanted to move that direction but weren’t sure if Gavin and Taylor would allow it.

He followed their gaze and spotted what they were looking at, or rather whom — Melinda Byer and her two sons, Matthew and Aaron. All three huddled on a bench, though of course Aaron was in his wheelchair beside it. Matthew stared at his shoes, misery etched on his young face. Melinda kept one hand firmly on Aaron’s chair, the other on Matthew, like she needed to protect the two boys. She looked worried. Matthew looked guilty.

But Aaron — Aaron looked completely lost. His face was devoid of color and his eyes continually darted from the officers to the body at the far end of the lot. He chewed on the thumbnail of his left hand and his right knee jiggled nervously on the footrest of the wheelchair.

Aaron was the person Shane needed to talk to.

Aaron was his witness.

First things first though.

He slammed the Buick’s door loudly enough to draw some attention.

“Keep McCallister away from the deceased,” he growled, walking over for a quick assessment of the body. He hoped he never became accustomed to seeing the violence one person could do to another. This one seemed pretty senseless. Closer inspection seemed to confirm she was in fact a little, old Amish woman, struck down on a cool September night.

“I have feelings, Black. When have I ever compromised one of your crime scenes?” Trent stuck his hand out and Shane shook it.

Hard as it was to admit such a thing, Shane liked the editor of the Gazette. Normally he stayed clear of the press, but Trent was different. He’d kept the girls safe on more than one occasion, though he’d managed to pull a few good headlines out of it in the process.

“There’s always a first time,” Shane mumbled. “How do you manage to beat me to every crime scene?”

“Maybe because I live in Shipshe.”

“Yeah. Your lack of travel time is giving you a leg up.”

Trent nodded toward the corpse. “Seems lately, we’re having more than our fair share of murders.”

“We don’t know it’s a murder,” Shane muttered, though Trent had no doubt reached the same conclusion he had. “If it is, I wouldn’t call three cases in fifteen months a crime wave.”

He scowled as Trent began scribbling in his book. As far as quotes went though, that was a relatively harmless one. He started to walk away, then turned around and pointed a finger at Trent.

“No pictures of the deceased.”

“No identifying pictures. I know the rules.”

“Be sure you follow them.” Shane turned and approached a crime-scene tech.

“Cause of death?”

“Good evening to you too, Shane.” Leroy Jackson’s white teeth practically glowed when he smiled — his dark-skinned face melting into the night. Short, thin, and balding, he was the best crime tech Shane had ever known — and he’d known more than a few.

“Suppose it could be worse. Could have several senior citizens falling out of the bushes.”

“Wouldn’t say she fell, given the angle of her body.” Leroy was taking measurements and writing them down in his book. Most techs used recorders now, but Leroy used a book, like the old-timers. Shane had asked him why once, and Leroy admitted knowing a guy who had a recorder break on him. The killer had gone free because forensics couldn’t stand up to the defense during the trial.

“So she was pushed?”

“Not exactly.”

“I don’t understand.”

“Neither do I. It’s more like she jumped or something jolted her.”

“Taser?”

“That’s what I was thinking, but there are no obvious signs of it — would have to be one of the newer, wireless models. An autopsy should be able to tell us.”

Shane stared down at the scene, sighed, and ran his hand over the back of his neck. Like he’d figured … it was going to be a long night. “Send pics of those shoeprints to my email along with anything else you find.”

“You got it.”

Shane finally strode to Callie.

When she turned her face up toward his, it was all he could do not to reach forward and wipe the fear off her face, smooth the worry lines away, kiss her as softly as he had outside the Lapps’ barn back in Goshen. Had that been last winter? He’d been trying to take their relationship to the next level for months, but she’d been avoiding his calls. To be honest, they didn’t have a relationship — you couldn’t call meeting over criminal investigations dates.

So Shane didn’t kiss her or touch her face. He settled for catching her hand in his.

“You okay?”

“Everyone keeps asking me that.” She stared at the ground as she spoke. “At least I think that’s what Deborah asked me.”

“Is that a yes or no?” He ran his thumb up and down the inside of her palm.

When she still didn’t glance up, Deborah answered for her. “She’s better than she was five minutes ago. At least she’s standing now.”

“True?” Shane asked.

“True.” Callie’s voice was soft, with a slight tremor.

“Did you find the body?”

“Yes.” She glanced at him then, her brown eyes brimming with tears, but she blinked them back. She looked away, staring out at the crowd gathering across the street.

He put his hand under her chin, waited until her dark eyes met his. “Don’t worry. We’ll catch him.”

“Him?”

“Not likely that a woman would bump off an old lady in public. Women tend to be sneakier — use poison or the dinnerware. Plus there’s the size of the shoeprints tracking away from the body. You’d have to be talking about a warrior woman, someone from the Amazon, and she would be fairly easy to spot. My bet is our perp’s a male.”

“So you do think it was murder? Not an … an accident?” Callie’s eyes filled with a wild terror he’d seen before, seen too often in victims of crime, and it tore at his heart to see it in her.

She’d been through a lot since coming to Shipshe, and she’d always been strong. His mind flashed back to the first time he’d arrested her, and he nearly smiled. Callie Harper was one tough woman. She had experience around dead bodies. But he’d never seen her quite so rattled before.

Why the meltdown now?

Why was this murder affecting her so deeply?

“I suppose she could have picked your parking lot to have a heart attack, but other evidence —” He stopped himself, knowing he shouldn’t share the details with her and Deborah. They weren’t on the police department staff and weren’t part of the team, even if they did find a way of showing up during every murder investigation. “My guess is foul play. We’ll know in the next few hours. And if it is murder, I’m betting the perp was a he —”

“He’s still out there, Shane. Whoever did this.” Callie started to say more, then pressed her fingers to her lips.

Shane glanced at Aaron, and then back at her, wondering where he should start.

“Go to Aaron,” she whispered. “I think he might have seen what happened. I just heard … I just heard Max barking as I was coming back from an errand.” She held up a bag from the General Store. “I started running as soon as I heard him barking. I knew something was wrong.”

“So you came from …”

“The south.” Callie turned and pointed. “I’d been to purchase register tape. Max was with Aaron. When I heard him barking, I ran and I … I didn’t see her at first … then Aaron waved me back, and that’s when I noticed her.”

“Exactly as she is now?”

“Yes. I checked for a pulse, but there was none. Mrs. Knepp was already dead.”

Deborah sighed. “I wonder if her daughter has heard.”

“You’re sure the deceased is Mrs. Knepp?” Shane asked, as every muscle in his back grew more rigid.

“Yeah. I’m sure.”

“How do you know her?” Shane frowned, pulled down his ball cap. He didn’t like that Callie knew the deceased. Didn’t like that her involvement in the murder was already growing more complicated.

“She’s the owner of Quilts and Needles,” Callie explained. “It’s the other quilt shop in town.” She stopped, gazed around as if the killer might jump out of the bushes. “Max and Aaron were already here when it happened — I guess. That must be why Max was b-b-barking.”

The final words were hard to make out, her teeth were chattering so badly.

“Deborah, take her over to the ambulance.”

“I’m f-f-fine.”

“You’re in shock, Callie.” The words came out sharper than he intended. He pulled in a deep breath and forced his aggravation down. It wasn’t her fault it happened here. And it wasn’t her fault she knew the victim. “Go with Deborah and let the paramedics check you over.”

When she continued to shake her head, the last of Shane’s patience snapped. “Go now or I’ll carry you there myself.”

Callie’s eyes flashed with a small spark of the anger he was used to, and the worry gnawing at the base of his neck backed off a tad.

“She can walk,” Deborah murmured.

Callie tried to yank her hand out of his grasp, but he pulled her back to him. “They’ll give you a blanket and some water. Sit down in their rig for a few minutes and let your adrenaline return to normal. I’ll check on Aaron.”

Shane had been trying to get close to Callie Harper since the morning they’d spent at the top of Timothy Lapp’s silo — the morning he’d been terrified a nineteen-year-old boy would pull a trigger and end her life. He’d been patient because he cared for her and he didn’t believe in rushing things, but seeing her standing there beneath the streetlights with another dead body only a hundred feet away, he couldn’t help himself.

Before he could question whether it was the right thing to do, he turned her face toward his and kissed her softly on the lips. Then, without another word, he walked away.

As Aaron watched the entire scene unfold, his emotions hopped all over the place, like the grease that popped in the iron pan when his mamm fried chicken. Right now what he was feeling most was surprise, but sometimes fear crept in, and then suddenly he’d find himself curious about what was happening. Grease popping in the pan — that’s what he was.

This was nothing like that Western movie starring John Wayne.

In The Cowboys, John Wayne was okay, even after the cattle rustlers showed up and shot him in the back. He hadn’t looked okay to Aaron — not with blood coming out of his elbow and his shoulder and his stomach. Aaron had been upset the first time he’d watched the movie, and it had taken all of his concentration not to cry when the boys and Mr. Nightlinger had buried John Wayne on the hillside. Then Justin had shown him how they could hit the replay button and see that the old cowboy was fine. The movie would start over and things on the screen were like before. The killing in John Wayne movies was all pretend.

Tonight was different.

Everything — from the body on the pavement to the crime-scene tape to the Englischer walking toward him — everything told him this was real.

“Melinda.” The Englischer stopped in front of them, waited for his mamm to say something.

“Detective Black.”

“Are the boys all right?”

“They seem to be. We waited here because Officer Taylor asked us to. This is where Aaron was when …” His mother clutched his chair more tightly, so tight he could feel it shake a bit under the pressure. “When it happened, I think. I ran out to check on him after Martha came in the shop to ask Deborah to call 9-1-1. Matt was out here with him. Then we all waited here.”

Detective Black turned and studied the scene once more, then focused on Aaron’s mamm again. “That’s good. That was the right thing to do.”

He stuck his hands in his back pockets and sighed heavily, like he had to give bad news. Aaron’s teacher sighed that way sometimes, and good things never followed. “Callie says the deceased is Mrs. Knepp. Did you know her?”

Aaron couldn’t see his mamm, but he heard her pull in her breath sharp-like. “Ya. ‘Course I do. When Callie’s shop was closed, we all had to go there for our quilting needs.”

“Do you know anyone who would want to harm her?”

“No. Mrs. Knepp, she’s lived in Shipshe for as long as I can remember. She was cranky, but no one took offense to it. That was simply her way.”

“All right. I’m going to need to ask the boys a few questions now.”

His mamm loosened her grip on the chair a bit, leaned forward, and gave them both her serious look. “Boys, this is Detective Black. Answer his questions directly. Don’t add to your answers at all to make your stories better. He needs to know exactly what you saw so he can do his job.”

Aaron nodded that he understood and noticed Matt did the same.

“Ya, Detective Black.” Matt stood up tall.

“All right, Detective Black.” Aaron tried to sit straighter in his chair.

“You can both call me Shane, since we’re working together on this.” The officer squatted down in front of Aaron’s chair. ‘Course Aaron had seen him around town before, but he’d never seen him this close. He didn’t wear a uniform like the other officers. He was wearing a baseball cap, which seemed funny. But it was obvious — even to Aaron, and he was only seven, nearly eight — that Shane was The Law. He was tall and thin, but you could tell he was strong too.

Strong like Aaron’s dat was strong.

Most Englischers he knew weren’t near as strong as his dat. His mamm said that was because his dat worked in the field all day. Detective Black didn’t work in the field, but it was still plain as could be — he was tough enough to do anything that needed doing. Probably he could build the barns and move the animals, same as Aaron’s daed did.

Aaron stared down at his legs, at how useless they were, and the old feelings of shame and regret bubbled up from somewhere near his stomach.

Then Detective Black — or rather Shane — started talking to Aaron’s bruder, and Aaron forgot about feeling bad. It was like watching the movie again, and he wanted to know what was going to happen next. He had questions too.

This officer was different from the others. He did things Aaron didn’t understand. Aaron had watched him walk over to Mrs. Knepp, but he only paused for an awfully short time, which seemed odd. Didn’t he need to study her body closer?

Then he’d talked with Miss Callie and Martha’s mamm longer. Why was that?

Questions swirled through Aaron’s mind as he looked into the man’s pitch-black eyes. The questions nearly made him dizzy, like when he watched his kite tossing back and forth on a windy day—’course he could only hold the spool of string while his bruder ran with the kite, but he still liked to stare up into the sky and watch it take flight.

And honestly Aaron didn’t mind studying Detective Black now, if it weren’t for the dead woman at the other side of the parking lot. He should feel bad though. He’d just seen someone hurt someone else. Violence was wrong. How could he be interested in what was happening with Detective Black like Matt was interested in reading the sports page of the local paper? This wasn’t something he should be thinking about right now.

He wondered if that made him a very bad person.

He wondered if he should talk to his mamm and dat about that — maybe later when they were home and he was ready to say his evening prayers.

“Matthew, did you see what happened?”

“Nein. I … I had left. I shouldn’t have. I lost my wallet, and I went back to find it.” Matt stared at a spot on the ground, and Aaron knew he was wondering if he could have stopped the bad man if he’d been here.

But he couldn’t have.

Aaron had seen the hatred on the man’s face. Remembering it made the candy apple he’d eaten earlier turn sour in his stomach, made him think he might need to throw up in the bushes, but he didn’t want to puke in front of everyone. His mamm would fuss for sure and insist he go straight to bed. He swallowed and pushed the sour apple back down.

Matt couldn’t have stopped the man. Probably no one could have, except maybe John Wayne.

Maybe Shane.

“All right. So you wheeled Aaron here first. The two of you were here alone and —”

“No. Martha was with us. I realized I’d left my wallet somewhere, but wasn’t sure where. So we decided to go back and find it.”

“That was my idea,” Aaron piped in. “Remember? I suggested that Martha go to where you bought the slingshot and you go to where you bought the candy apple. It was my idea that you leave.”

Matt licked his lips. “I’m the oldest. I should have known better than to leave you alone.”

“I wasn’t alone. You left me with Max.”

Matt didn’t answer that. Instead he went back to staring at the spot on the ground.

“What time do you think that was?”

“Wasn’t dark yet.” Matt looked up and out across the crowd that had gathered down the street. “But the lights in the trees had already come on, so it was tending toward dark.”

“All right, we can check the timer on those.”

“I’ve got it!” Matt sat up straighter and smacked has right fist into his left palm, exactly like when he was warming up to catch a baseball. Aaron loved that sound. “It was seven o’clock exactly when we left him. I know because I heard the clock tower — the one down by the train station — strike seven times. I thought, If I run, I can be to that booth before the seventh strike.”

Shane waited for Aaron’s mamm to confirm the time.

She nodded once. “Sounds about right. It was growing dark when I first heard Max bark. I thought he’d seen a squirrel or a bird. After that, Martha came running inside telling us to call for help.”

“We were gone ten, maybe fifteen, minutes. No more than that. I heard Max barking too, and I started running back.” Matt turned and pointed to the north. “You can hear Max from a long way when he’s bedauerlich or naerfich.”

Shane glanced toward Melinda.

She mouthed the words sad and nervous to him.

“Good. Those are good details. Now this is very important.” Shane looked each person in the eye, making sure he had their attention, then he focused on Aaron. “You were waiting here alone with Max — say, from seven to seven-fifteen. Tell me what you saw first.”

Aaron felt everyone’s attention on him. He tried not to squirm in his seat. “I was staring straight ahead, and I saw someone’s shoes, then dark green cloth. I thought, That can’t be a man, because no man would have pants that color.”

Shane stood and backed up so he was looking toward the body from Aaron’s vantage point. “You could only see the woman’s shoes?”

“And the bottom of her dress.”

“Why was that?”

“Because she was hiding in the bushes.”

Shane stood there for a minute, staring at the same thing Aaron was staring at — which at the moment was a lot of crime techs crowded around a dead body. Then he walked in front of him again, a frown pulling down the corners of his mouth. “Are you sure about that?”

“Ya. I thought it was strange, and Max and I, we leaned out to see better. She kept disappearing, because of the light and because her dress was sort of the same color as the leaves of the bush.”

“Huh.”

Aaron realized that was the first thing any of them had said that had surprised the officer. He hadn’t expected that. And come to think of it, why had Mrs. Knepp been hiding?

As if he were echoing his thoughts, Shane asked, “Any idea what she was doing there, hiding in the bushes?”

Aaron began to chew on his thumbnail, though there wasn’t much of it left.

“Aaron?”

“I wouldn’t want to speak badly of anyone. And she’s dead, right? It’s not pretend, like … like in the movies?”

Beside him, he felt his mamm stiffen.

“No. It’s not pretend.” Shane didn’t seem surprised at all that Aaron had asked the question. “Whatever you tell me, it stays between us, Aaron. But maybe —” Shane glanced up and over to where Mrs. Knepp lay. “Maybe it will help me catch whoever did this to her. So probably she wouldn’t mind.”

“Well …” Aaron ran his hand over the top rim of one of his wheels, another thing he did sometimes to calm himself. “It looked to me like she was spying on Miss Callie’s shop. She was holding something up to her eyes, you know?”

Then he mimicked making two circles with his hands and holding them in front of his eyes.

“I know it was almost dark, but did you see any reflection coming from her direction?”

Aaron glanced at his mamm, unsure what Shane was asking.

“Reflection,” his mamm repeated. He noticed her eyes were shiny behind her glasses, and he wondered if what he had done was going to make her cry. “Reflections are like the sun shining off water.”

“Oh, ya. When she’d put her hands up, there would be a shiny sparkle for a minute. I suppose that’s what made me notice her to begin with. It was sort of like a game spotting her hiding there, but then … but then the big Englisch man came. He came up behind her and maybe pushed her. I’m not sure about that part.”

“Go on,” Shane said softly.

“Well, she sort of jumped, sort of fell then. Like when we catch a fish and Dat cleans it. ‘Cept once I was helping and didn’t hold the fish tight enough. Dat put his knife in, and the fish jumped.” Aaron stole a peek at his bruder, but Matt only shrugged. “Like that, I guess. She jumped sort of, then lay there, like the fish lies there after Dat finishes gutting it.”

Aaron felt coldness spread inside him then, and he didn’t know what it meant. All he knew was that he wanted to go home.

Maybe he shouldn’t be here.

Maybe he shouldn’t have seen all he had seen.

Maybe it was because he’d watched the movies with Justin and now he was paying for that sin.

“She never did move again. The man didn’t even seem surprised.” When no one said anything, Aaron pushed on. “Dat, he’s kind with the fish, the ones we throw back and the ones we keep. He says gut things to them and talks of how we need to eat and how Gotte provides for us. The Englisch man, well, he didn’t seem kind at all, and he didn’t say anything. He stood over her, then reached forward and grabbed her bag and maybe …” Pulling in a big breath that rattled against his ribs and squeezed his heart, Aaron forced himself to finish his sentence. “Maybe he did pick up something else too. It was getting toward dark then, and I couldn’t see so well. Then he walked away. Like she meant less than a fish. Like she meant nothing.”

Aaron didn’t realize he was crying until Shane patted his knee, stood up, and told him he’d done well, that he and Matt had both done well. There was a big roaring in Aaron’s ears, and then his mother was standing behind his chair, both of her hands on his shoulders.





Vannetta Chapman's books